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Thursday, July 9, 2026

The Contractual Fiancée

Chapter Six

The Blood That Opened the Door


Dr. Graves stepped through the Living Veil as though he had been invited.

That was the first thing Olivia noticed.

Not his pale eyes.

Not the gold sunburst artifact gripped in his gloved hand.

Not even Rowan’s family ring resting in his palm like a stolen confession.

No.

It was the way the veil accepted him.

The shimmering curtain between worlds did not burn him. It did not resist him. It did not recoil from his presence. It parted for him with a soft, silver sigh, folding around the shoulders of his long black coat like a loyal servant welcoming its master home.

That terrified Olivia more than the blast of golden light that had nearly taken her head off.

Rowan stood in front of her, one arm thrown back to keep her behind him, his body tense and ready. He looked like every rescue story she had ever read—steady under pressure, controlled under threat, brave in the most infuriating way possible.

But Olivia had seen his eyes when Graves lifted the ring.

Shock.

Recognition.

Guilt.

Not enough to convict him.

Enough to wound her.

“Ask him,” Dr. Graves said again, his voice soft as velvet laid over broken glass. “Ask your fiancé why his blood opened the Archive for me.”

The word fiancé twisted in the cold mountain air.

Fake.

Contractual.

Temporary.

A legal costume stitched together by a dead man’s will and a Trust that had told them only enough truth to trap them.

Olivia stepped out from behind Rowan.

Rowan’s arm tightened. “Stay behind me.”

She looked at him, and for the first time since they had met, her voice did not shake with anger.

It shook with hurt.

“Why does he have your ring?”

Rowan did not answer quickly enough.

That was answer enough to make something inside Olivia crack.

Graves smiled.

The forest had gone unnaturally still around them. The pines did not sway. The birds did not call. Even Lake Tahoe below seemed to have fallen silent, its blue surface hidden beyond the ridge but somehow present, listening.

The journal hovered beside Olivia, pages open, ink still wet across the prophecy.

ONE GUARDIAN WILL BETRAY THE OTHER.

The words seemed larger now.

Darker.

Hungry.

Rowan’s jaw flexed. “That ring belonged to my grandfather.”

Graves lifted it between two fingers. “How sentimental.”

Rowan’s gaze never left the ring. “Where did you get it?”

“Oh, Rowan.” Graves sighed as if disappointed in a slow student. “Still asking the wrong questions. The better question is not where I found it. The better question is why it worked.”

Olivia’s heart pounded so hard she felt it in her throat.

“Worked how?” she asked.

Graves turned his pale attention to her, and Olivia instantly regretted speaking. There was intelligence in his face, yes—but worse than that, there was fascination. He looked at her the way a collector might look at a rare object he had no intention of leaving in one piece.

“The Archive is not a library, Miss Jackson,” he said. “Not merely. It is a locked memory. A living record. A chamber of preserved truths hidden beneath centuries of lies, conquest, greed, and convenient history.”

Olivia swallowed. “I know what the Archive is.”

“No,” he said gently. “You know what the Trust wanted you to know.”

Rowan shifted slightly, ready to move.

Graves noticed.

The artifact in his hand pulsed once with gold light.

Rowan stopped.

A thin smile crossed Graves’s mouth. “Good. You remember pain.”

Olivia looked at Rowan sharply. “What does that mean?”

Rowan’s eyes remained on Graves. “It means he’s trying to distract us.”

“No,” Graves said. “I am trying to educate her. Something you and your secretive family apparently failed to do.”

“My family has nothing to do with this.”

Graves laughed softly. “Every lie sounds smaller when spoken by a DeVille.”

The air tightened.

Olivia felt the old journal tremble beside her.

The pages began to flutter.

Rowan lowered his voice. “Olivia, listen carefully. When I say run, you run downhill. Do not look back.”

She stared at the back of his head. “You must be confusing me with a woman who takes orders.”

“This is not the time.”

“This is exactly the time.”

Graves tilted his head, amused. “She has spirit. The Jackson line always did.”

Olivia’s eyes narrowed. “What do you know about my family?”

“More than they told you.”

“You do not know me.”

“No,” Graves said. “But I know what you carry.”

The journal snapped shut in midair.

Then slowly, it turned toward Graves like a living thing looking at an enemy.

For the first time, his expression changed.

Only slightly.

A flicker of hunger.

“There it is,” he whispered. “The Restorer’s Codex.”

Olivia looked at the journal. “That is not what it’s called.”

“It has had many names.” Graves stepped closer. “The Califia Ledger. The Memory Book. The Witness Text. The Restorer’s Codex. Your ancestors were entrusted with it because they had a gift for preserving what others tried to erase.”

Olivia’s chest tightened.

Her whole life, she had loved old paper.

Old letters.

Old journals.

Old stories that smelled faintly of dust and lavender, cedar boxes and forgotten rooms. She had believed restoration was patience, skill, reverence. She had believed she was drawn to fragile pages because someone had to care enough to save them.

Now Graves was speaking as if that love had been placed inside her long before she was born.

“The Jackson line restores,” he said. “The DeVille line opens.”

Olivia turned slowly to Rowan.

He closed his eyes for one brief second.

There it was again.

Guilt.

“Rowan,” she whispered.

He looked at her then, and beneath the danger, beneath the training, beneath the heroic composure she had been trying so hard not to admire, she saw something raw.

“I didn’t know,” he said.

Graves chuckled. “Not entirely.”

Rowan’s voice hardened. “Shut up.”

“Oh, but she deserves the truth, does she not? Isn’t that what guardians are supposed to protect?”

Olivia looked from Rowan to Graves. “What does the DeVille line open?”

Graves lifted the ring.

The black stone set into it caught the light and flashed—not black at all, Olivia realized, but deep blue, like Tahoe at midnight.

“Doors,” Graves said. “Veils. Vaults. Blood-sealed chambers. Places built by people wise enough to know that truth must be protected from those who would turn it into power.”

The Living Veil behind him rippled.

For a moment, Olivia saw the chamber again—shelves of journals, blue candles, gold artifacts, stone walls carved with symbols. Then the image shifted. She saw water. A vast underground pool reflecting a ceiling of stars.

And in that reflection—

A woman’s crown.

Queen Califia.

Olivia sucked in a breath.

Graves saw her reaction and smiled.

“Yes,” he said. “She is closer than they told you.”

Rowan moved fast.

One second he was still.

The next he was lunging at Graves.

Olivia barely saw him cross the distance. Rowan drove his shoulder into Graves and slammed him backward toward the veil. The artifact flashed. Gold light burst between them. Rowan grunted, but did not let go.

“Olivia!” he shouted. “The journal!”

She did not know what he meant.

Then the journal opened violently, pages spinning until symbols lifted off the paper like sparks.

A circle of script appeared in the air.

Not English.

Not Spanish.

Not any language Olivia recognized.

Yet somehow she understood one word.

Seal.

The Living Veil shuddered.

Graves twisted under Rowan’s grip and struck him with the sunburst artifact. A crack of light exploded against Rowan’s chest. He flew backward and hit the ground hard.

“Rowan!”

Olivia ran to him.

He was already trying to rise, one hand pressed to his ribs, face tight with pain.

“I said the journal,” he ground out.

“I don’t know how!”

“Yes, you do.”

“No, I absolutely do not!”

The journal hovered in front of Olivia, pages glowing now, words forming and reforming too quickly to read.

The veil widened behind Graves.

Cold air poured through it.

Not mountain cold.

Ancient cold.

The kind that belonged under stone, under water, under time.

Graves brushed dirt from his sleeve as if Rowan had merely inconvenienced him. “The Trust made the same mistake everyone makes with love stories.”

Olivia’s hands curled into fists. “This is not a love story.”

“No?” Graves looked between her and Rowan. “Then why did the veil wake when you touched the same page?”

Olivia went still.

Rowan’s face changed.

Graves smiled wider.

“There it is. The part they did not tell you. The Archive does not open for contracts. It opens for recognition. For bloodlines aligned. For two unwilling hearts standing at the edge of truth and lying to everyone but the magic.”

Olivia felt heat rise to her face despite the cold.

“That is ridiculous,” she said.

“Is it?” Graves asked. “Then deny it.”

She opened her mouth.

Nothing came out.

Rowan looked at her.

For one dangerous second, the world narrowed.

The forest vanished.

Graves vanished.

The artifact, the prophecy, the Trust, the fake engagement, all of it blurred into the space between them.

Olivia remembered Rowan catching her when the vision shattered.

His hand over hers on the trail.

His body covering hers when the tree exploded.

The way he had said still fake.

Then mostly.

Her heart betrayed her with one hard, reckless beat.

The journal flared pink-gold.

Graves’s smile vanished.

“Interesting,” he murmured.

The ground beneath them trembled.

Deep below the mountain, something answered.

A sound rolled upward through stone and root.

Not thunder.

A door.

Opening.

Rowan struggled to his feet. “Olivia, whatever you’re doing, stop.”

“I’m not doing anything!”

The journal spun toward the ridge.

A beam of light shot from its pages into the Living Veil.

The veil sealed halfway, then strained open again as Graves lifted the sunburst artifact. His face tightened with effort.

“Enough,” he snapped.

The artifact blazed.

Gold light wrapped around the journal and yanked it toward him.

Olivia felt it like a hook in her chest.

“No!”

She grabbed the journal with both hands.

Pain shot through her palms.

The pages burned cold.

Graves pulled harder.

The journal stretched between them in midair, caught in an invisible battle. Olivia dug her boots into the ground. Rowan staggered toward her, wrapped one arm around her waist, and grabbed the book with his free hand.

The moment his hand touched hers, everything exploded into light.


Olivia was no longer on the ridge.

She was standing in water up to her ankles.

Lake Tahoe spread around her beneath a night sky full of impossible stars.

Rowan stood beside her, breathing hard, his fingers still locked around hers.

Before them, the lake reflected a woman neither of them could see standing above it.

Queen Califia’s voice filled the darkness.

One restores. One opens. Neither commands. Both must choose.

Olivia looked down.

In the lake’s reflection, she saw herself wearing a crown of ink-black flowers.

Beside her reflection stood Rowan, a ring of blue fire burning around his hand.

Then the water darkened.

Another reflection appeared behind them.

Dr. Graves.

Only he was not alone.

Behind him stood someone in a hooded cloak bearing the Trust’s silver insignia.

Olivia’s breath stopped.

The queen’s voice lowered.

Beware the hand that sends you. Beware the blood that answers. Beware the kiss that wakes the second door.

The vision shattered.

Olivia slammed back into her body with a gasp.

She and Rowan were on the ground.

The journal lay between them, smoking faintly but intact.

The Living Veil was gone.

Dr. Graves was gone.

So was the ring.

For a moment, neither of them moved.

Only the forest remained—silent, scarred, and suddenly full of ordinary sunlight.

Olivia pushed herself up on shaking arms.

Her palms were marked.

Not burned.

Marked.

A faint gold symbol curved across each hand like delicate ink beneath the skin.

She turned them over, horrified.

Rowan saw and went still.

“What?” she demanded. “What is it?”

He did not answer.

She grabbed his wrist and turned his hand over.

The same mark glowed on his palm.

Matching.

Binding.

Olivia jerked away. “No.”

Rowan’s face was pale. “Olivia—”

“No. Do not say my name like that.”

“We need to get back to the cabin.”

“We need answers.”

“We need both.”

The journal opened on the ground.

A new page appeared.

Not old paper.

New.

White.

Waiting.

Then words wrote themselves in a dark, elegant hand.

THE SECOND DOOR HAS HEARD YOU.
IT WILL OPEN ONLY WHEN THE FALSE ENGAGEMENT BECOMES A TRUE VOW.

Olivia stared at the sentence.

Then she laughed once, sharply, because the alternative was screaming.

“No,” she said. “Absolutely not. I refuse. I reject. I unsubscribe.”

Rowan looked as if the ground had shifted beneath him. “The Archive thinks we have to make the engagement real.”

“The Archive can think again.”

The page darkened.

More words appeared.

BY MOONRISE, ONE OF YOU MUST SPEAK THE VOW.
BY MIDNIGHT, ONE OF YOU WILL BLEED FOR THE LIE.

A cold wind swept through the trees.

Far below, from the direction of the cabin, a bell began to ring.

Olivia turned sharply.

“There is no bell at the cabin,” she said.

Rowan was already moving.

They ran.

Down the trail, past granite and pine, past the shattered tree, past the place where the veil had opened. Olivia’s lungs burned. The journal thudded against her side in the bag. The marks on her palms pulsed with every step.

The bell kept ringing.

Slow.

Deep.

Impossible.

When they reached the clearing above the cabin, Olivia stopped so suddenly Rowan nearly collided with her.

The cabin door stood wide open.

Black smoke curled from inside.

And nailed to the front porch was a strip of parchment marked with the Trust’s silver seal.

Rowan moved toward it first.

Olivia followed, heart hammering.

He pulled the parchment free.

His face hardened as he read.

“What does it say?” Olivia asked.

Rowan handed it to her.

The message was written in fresh red ink.

THE TRUST HAS WITHDRAWN ITS PROTECTION.
OLIVIA JACKSON IS TO BE DELIVERED TO DR. GRAVES BEFORE MIDNIGHT.
ROWAN DEVILLE HAS ALREADY AGREED.

Olivia looked up slowly.

Rowan stood frozen on the porch, smoke curling around him, the mark on his palm glowing like an accusation.

Behind them, inside the cabin, someone whispered from the dark:

“Run, Olivia. He sold you before you ever met him.”


End of Chapter Six

Cliff-hanger: The Trust’s sealed message claims Rowan agreed to surrender Olivia to Dr. Graves before midnight—and a hidden voice inside the cabin warns her that Rowan sold her before they ever met.

Next Chapter:

Chapter Seven: The Bride Mark

The Contractual Fiancée

Chapter Five

The Journal That Breathed


By dawn, Lake Tahoe looked like a secret the world had forgotten to finish telling.

Mist curled over the water in long silver ribbons, drifting between the pine trees and the glassy shore as if the lake itself had exhaled in its sleep. The cabin sat above it all, tucked into the mountain like an old promise—wooden beams, stone chimney, wide windows, and one impossible bedroom that Olivia Jackson had still not forgiven fate for arranging.

She had slept badly.

Not because the bed was uncomfortable.

Not because the mountain air was too cold.

And not because Rowan DeVille had taken the sofa downstairs without complaint, stretching his long frame across it like a man who had slept in worse places and never bothered to mention them.

No.

Olivia had slept badly because the journal had whispered her name.

Olivia...

A soft voice.

Old.

Feminine.

Not quite inside the room, not quite inside her head.

Then the pages of the ancient California journal had fluttered open by themselves on the table beside the bed, even though every window had been shut, every draft blocked, and the fire downstairs had burned low hours before midnight.

She had stared at it from beneath the blankets, heart pounding, too proud to scream and too frightened to move.

Then, written across the page in ink that had not been there before, one sentence appeared:

Love is not chosen. It is recognized.

Olivia had not slept after that.

Now she stood in the kitchen wrapped in an oversized cream sweater, her curls pinned messily atop her head, one hand around a mug of coffee and the other pressed against the old leather journal as though she could keep it from doing anything else supernatural before breakfast.

Across the room, Rowan was already awake.

Of course he was.

Men like Rowan DeVille probably woke before danger did.

He stood near the window in a black thermal shirt and jeans, speaking quietly into his phone. His hair was still damp from a shower. His jaw carried the shadow of sleeplessness, but somehow that only made him look more dangerous, more alive, more annoyingly handsome.

Olivia hated that she noticed.

She hated even more that when he ended the call and turned toward her, his eyes went straight to her hand.

“The journal again?” he asked.

Olivia lifted her chin. “Good morning to you too.”

His mouth curved slightly. “Good morning, contractual fiancée.”

“Do not call me that before coffee.”

“You’re holding coffee.”

“Then do not call me that while I am deciding whether to throw coffee.”

Rowan’s smile deepened, but it faded when the journal gave one soft, almost human sigh beneath Olivia’s palm.

Both of them froze.

The sound was barely there.

A breath through paper.

A living thing trying not to be heard.

Rowan crossed the kitchen in three strides. “Tell me that was the cabin settling.”

Olivia slowly removed her hand.

The journal opened.

Not dramatically. Not with a gust of wind. Not like in a movie.

It opened gently, almost politely, as if the book had manners.

The pages turned one by one until they stopped on a drawing Olivia had never seen before: a woman rising from a black sea, crowned with gold, her arms lifted toward a sky full of stars. Around her stood other women—warriors, scholars, healers, guardians. Behind them was a veil, painted in shimmering ink that seemed to move when Olivia looked directly at it.

Rowan leaned closer. “Queen Califia.”

Olivia swallowed. “Yes.”

“You’re sure?”

“My whole childhood was built on wanting to know more about her,” Olivia whispered. “California history. Mission stories. My mother’s relatives in Redwood City. Old journals, old maps, old names people forgot or tried to erase.”

She touched the edge of the drawing carefully.

“But this… this is different.”

The ink warmed beneath her fingertip.

Rowan’s expression sharpened. “Olivia.”

Before she could pull away, the room changed.

The kitchen disappeared.

The smell of coffee vanished.

The cabin, the window, the pine trees—gone.

Olivia stood barefoot on black sand beneath a violet sky.

A vast lake stretched before her, only it was not Tahoe. Not exactly. The water was darker, deeper, reflecting stars that did not belong to morning. Across the surface rose a woman’s voice, rich and low, carrying the weight of centuries.

The Archive wakes when blood remembers.

Olivia tried to speak, but her voice failed.

Beside her, Rowan stood rigid, his hand instinctively reaching for hers.

This time, she did not pull away.

A figure appeared in the lake’s reflection.

Not on the shore.

Not in the sky.

In the water.

A queen crowned in gold.

Her face was beautiful, fierce, and sorrowful.

Queen Califia.

Olivia’s breath caught.

The queen’s eyes lifted, and though she existed only in reflection, Olivia felt seen all the way through.

The contract binds nothing. The choice binds everything.

The lake trembled.

Then another reflection appeared behind the queen.

A man.

Thin.

Gray-haired.

Wearing dark gloves.

Holding a small golden artifact shaped like a sunburst.

Rowan’s hand tightened around Olivia’s.

“Graves,” he said.

The vision shattered.

The kitchen returned with violent suddenness.

Olivia stumbled backward, and Rowan caught her against him. For one suspended moment, she was pressed to his chest, her hands gripping his arms, his heartbeat pounding hard beneath her palm.

Neither of them moved.

Neither of them spoke.

Then the journal snapped shut.

Olivia jumped.

Rowan did not let go right away.

“You saw him too,” she said.

“Yes.”

“Dr. Graves.”

“Yes.”

“With an artifact.”

“Yes.”

Olivia pulled back slowly, trying to gather herself. “Then the Trust was telling the truth.”

Rowan’s jaw tightened. “Or enough of the truth to make us useful.”

That landed between them like a blade.

The Trust.

The family legacy.

The engagement requirement.

The impossible will.

The fake relationship neither of them had wanted.

Olivia looked toward the journal. “What is the Archive?”

Rowan’s silence answered before he did.

“You know something,” she said.

“I know pieces.”

“Then start sharing pieces.”

He looked out toward the lake. “My grandfather used to say the Archive wasn’t a place. It was a memory system. Journals, maps, artifacts, bloodlines, stories. A living record of California before people tried to flatten it into one version.”

Olivia’s pulse quickened. “And Queen Califia?”

“The center of it.”

“The myth?”

“The warning.”

A chill moved through her.

Rowan turned back to her. “Some families protected pieces of the Archive. Some exploited them. Some forgot what they were guarding until the wrong people came looking.”

“Like Graves.”

“Like Graves.”

Olivia picked up the journal, though every sensible part of her screamed not to touch it again. “Why would he want the artifact?”

Rowan’s face hardened. “Because if the stories are true, the artifacts don’t just record history. They unlock it.”

“What does that mean?”

“It means history can be awakened.”

Olivia stared at him. “That is not an answer. That is a nightmare wearing a poetic hat.”

Despite everything, Rowan almost smiled. “You always talk like that when you’re scared?”

“I talk better when I’m scared.”

“Good. Then keep talking.”

She narrowed her eyes. “You are enjoying this.”

“No,” he said quietly. “I am trying not to think about what happens if Graves already has the first piece.”

The first piece.

Olivia looked down at the journal. “The vision showed him with it.”

“Yes.”

“Where?”

Rowan crossed to the table and pulled out one of the maps they had found the night before.

“That’s what we need to figure out.”

The map was brittle and hand-drawn, showing the Tahoe shoreline, old trails, hidden coves, and marks that did not appear on any modern map. Olivia had spent half the night studying it by lamplight. She had thought the symbols were decorative.

Now one of them glowed faintly.

A small gold sunburst near the eastern ridge.

Olivia leaned over it. “That wasn’t glowing yesterday.”

“No.”

“Please tell me you have a calm, normal explanation.”

“I jumped out of a helicopter two days ago.”

“That is not calm or normal.”

“Exactly.”

The glowing mark pulsed once.

Then again.

Like a heartbeat.

Olivia’s stomach dropped. “It’s calling us.”

Rowan folded the map. “Then we go.”

She stepped back. “Absolutely not.”

“Olivia—”

“No. Do not ‘Olivia’ me in that deep rescue-hero voice. We are not hiking into the mountains because a haunted map blinked at us.”

“If Graves has the artifact, we need to know where he found it.”

“We need to call the Trust.”

“I already did.”

She blinked. “When?”

“This morning.”

“And?”

“They didn’t answer.”

That frightened her more than she wanted to admit.

The Trust had orchestrated everything. The gathering. The will. The engagement clause. The cabin. The journals. The families.

They had been intrusive, secretive, manipulative.

But silent?

That felt worse.

Olivia walked to the window. The lake was brightening now, blue spreading beneath the mist. Beautiful. Peaceful. Deceptive.

“You think something happened to them,” she said.

“I think Graves moved faster than they expected.”

“And now we are supposed to fix it?”

Rowan came to stand beside her. “No. We are supposed to survive long enough to understand what they pulled us into.”

She looked up at him. “And the engagement?”

His eyes softened for half a second. “Still fake.”

“Good.”

“Mostly.”

Her breath caught.

Rowan seemed to realize what he had said at the same time she did.

The air changed.

Warmth moved between them, dangerous and unwanted.

Olivia turned away first. “We should go before I decide to hit you with the haunted journal.”

“Fair.”


They prepared quickly.

Rowan packed with military efficiency: flashlight, rope, first-aid kit, water, protein bars, knife, emergency blanket, satellite communicator.

Olivia packed the journal, the map, two pens, her phone, and an attitude large enough to frighten wildlife.

Outside, the morning was cold enough to bite.

The trail began behind the cabin, climbing through pine and granite, with Lake Tahoe flashing between the trees like blue glass. For the first mile, they walked in silence.

Olivia told herself it was because the terrain required focus.

Not because Rowan kept offering his hand over rocks and she kept taking it.

Not because his touch felt steadier than it should.

Not because each time he released her, something inside her noticed the absence.

Finally, she said, “You are very irritating.”

Rowan glanced back. “That came out of nowhere.”

“No, it did not. It has been building.”

“What did I do now?”

“You are competent.”

He stopped. “That irritates you?”

“Yes.”

“Why?”

“Because reckless, arrogant men are supposed to be useless when actual danger appears.”

“I apologize for disappointing you.”

“You should.”

He laughed under his breath, and the sound moved through her before she could stop it.

They continued upward.

The glowing symbol on the map brightened as they neared the ridge. The journal grew warmer in Olivia’s bag. Once, she thought she heard singing—women’s voices layered in harmony, distant and aching—but when she stopped, the forest was silent.

Too silent.

No birds.

No insects.

No wind.

Rowan noticed too.

He lifted a hand, signaling her to stop.

Olivia froze.

Ahead, between two pines, something shimmered.

At first she thought it was sunlight.

Then the shimmer widened.

A vertical curtain hung between the trees, nearly invisible except where the morning light bent around it. It looked like heat rising off pavement, except the air was cold and the shape was too deliberate.

A veil.

The Living Veil.

Olivia whispered, “Rowan.”

“I see it.”

The journal in her bag pulsed hard.

The veil rippled.

On the other side, Olivia saw something impossible.

Not forest.

Not Tahoe.

A stone chamber.

Candles burning blue.

Shelves filled with journals.

Gold artifacts resting beneath glass.

And standing in the center of it all—

Dr. Graves.

He turned as if he sensed them watching.

His pale eyes met Olivia’s through the veil.

Then he smiled.

A slow, satisfied smile.

He lifted the sunburst artifact.

The air cracked.

Rowan grabbed Olivia and pulled her back just as a blast of golden light tore through the veil and struck the tree where her head had been.

Bark exploded.

Olivia screamed.

Rowan threw her behind a boulder and covered her body with his own as splinters rained down around them.

The veil flickered violently.

Graves’ voice slipped through it, calm and intimate.

“Miss Jackson. Mr. DeVille. How kind of the Trust to send me the heirs.”

Olivia’s blood turned cold.

Rowan rose to one knee, positioning himself between her and the veil.

“Run when I tell you.”

“No.”

“Olivia.”

“No. I am done being moved around like a chess piece by men with secrets.”

The journal flew out of her bag.

It hovered in midair.

Pages whipped open with furious speed until they stopped on a blank page. Ink bled upward from nowhere, forming words one line at a time.

THE FIRST ARTIFACT HAS BEEN TAKEN.
THE SECOND MUST NOT BE FOUND.
ONE GUARDIAN WILL BETRAY THE OTHER.

Olivia stopped breathing.

Rowan read the words.

Then slowly, his gaze shifted to her.

Before either of them could speak, the veil split open wider.

And from the other side, Dr. Graves stepped through.

He was holding Rowan’s family ring in his gloved hand.

“Ask him,” Graves said softly, smiling at Olivia. “Ask your fiancé why his blood opened the Archive for me.”


End of Chapter Five

Cliff-hanger: Dr. Graves reveals Rowan’s bloodline may have helped open the Archive—and Olivia must decide whether the man she is pretending to love has already betrayed her.

Next Chapter:

Chapter Six: The Blood That Opened the Door

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

The Contractual Fiancée

Chapter Four

The One-Room Mistake


The storm arrived like it had been summoned.

By the time Olivia Jackson stepped fully into Silver Pines Lodge, the world outside had vanished behind a curtain of white. Snow whipped across the windows in violent ribbons, rattling the old glass panes as though something with fingers was trying to get in.

The lobby glowed with firelight and old mountain charm. Heavy beams stretched across the ceiling. Lanterns burned low on iron hooks. A stone fireplace roared at the far end of the room, filling the lodge with the scent of cedar, smoke, and something older—something Olivia could not quite name.

Rowan DeVille stood beside her, brushing snow from the shoulders of his dark coat.

He looked entirely too calm.

That annoyed her.

“We should have turned back,” Olivia said.

Rowan glanced toward the window, where the road had already disappeared beneath fresh snow.

“And miss all this romantic scenery?”

“This is not romantic.”

“No? One isolated lodge. A storm. A fireplace. A mysterious trust forcing two strangers together.”

“Do not narrate my nightmare.”

Before Rowan could answer, the woman behind the front desk cleared her throat.

She was older, with silver hair pinned neatly at the back of her head and eyes the color of lake ice. Her name tag read: Mrs. Vale.

“Mr. DeVille. Ms. Jackson,” she said, looking down at the leather-bound reservation book. “We have been expecting you.”

“Good,” Olivia said. “Then you should have two reservations.”

“One reservation.”

Olivia blinked.

“Excuse me?”

“One room,” Mrs. Vale said.

The fire cracked loudly behind them.

Rowan’s eyebrows lifted, but he said nothing.

Olivia turned slowly toward him.

“Did you do this?”

“I am wounded you think so little of me.”

“I have known you less than twenty-four hours.”

“And already you believe I am capable of arranging weather, lodging, and legal manipulation?”

“Yes.”

A laugh almost escaped him.

Almost.

Mrs. Vale turned the book around.

“The reservation was made by the Trust. One room under both names.”

Olivia stared at the page.

There it was.

Olivia Jackson and Rowan DeVille.

Together.

In ink.

As if the paper had decided their fate before either of them had arrived.

A chill moved across Olivia’s arms, even though the fire was burning hot.

“The Trust made a mistake,” she said.

Mrs. Vale closed the book.

“The Trust does not make mistakes.”

Rowan’s gaze shifted to the woman behind the desk. For the first time since Olivia met him, his charming expression faded.

“What does that mean?” he asked.

Mrs. Vale looked toward the windows.

Outside, the lake could not be seen through the storm, but Olivia felt it there—vast, dark, waiting beneath the snow.

“It means,” Mrs. Vale said softly, “that some arrangements are older than the people who question them.”

Olivia did not like that answer.

Not one bit.


The room was on the third floor at the end of a narrow hallway lined with faded paintings of Lake Tahoe in different seasons. Summer blue. Autumn gold. Winter silver.

But in every painting, Olivia noticed the same strange detail.

The lake looked alive.

Not simply painted with movement or light.

Alive.

Watching.

She stopped in front of one painting where the water was frozen beneath a full moon. In the center of the ice, something dark curved beneath the surface.

A shadow.

A shape.

A warning.

“Olivia?”

Rowan stood a few steps ahead of her, holding the brass key Mrs. Vale had given them.

“I’m coming,” Olivia said.

The key turned in the lock with a heavy click.

The door opened.

And there it was.

One room.

One fireplace.

One bed.

A large bed, of course.

Because apparently the Trust had a flair for drama.

Olivia walked in first, her boots sinking into a thick woven rug. The room was beautiful in an old-world way, with dark wood furniture, cream curtains, and a private balcony facing the lake.

A fire had already been prepared in the small stone fireplace. Beside it sat two armchairs and a low table with a silver tray of tea, honey, and lemon.

At any other time, she might have admired it.

Instead, she pointed at the bed.

“No.”

Rowan stepped in behind her and closed the door.

“A powerful argument.”

“I am serious.”

“So am I. You take the bed. I’ll take the floor.”

“That is not the point.”

“What is the point?”

Olivia turned to face him.

“The point is that this keeps happening. The documents. The lodge. The room. Every time I try to make a choice, something else has already chosen for me.”

Rowan’s expression softened.

That was worse than his teasing.

She could defend herself against arrogance. She could withstand charm. But kindness had a way of slipping past locked doors.

“I know,” he said quietly.

Olivia looked away.

The storm battered the balcony doors. Snow pressed against the glass like pale hands.

“I don’t like being cornered,” she said.

“I noticed.”

Her eyes snapped back to him.

“That was not an insult,” Rowan said. “It was admiration.”

Olivia folded her arms.

“You admire women who are irritated with you?”

“More than is probably wise.”

For one dangerous second, the tension between them changed.

It was no longer just annoyance.

No longer just suspicion.

It became awareness.

The kind that warmed the air more than the fire ever could.

Olivia turned away first.

“I need to call the front desk.”

“The phones are out.”

“Of course they are.”

“The roads are closed too.”

“Of course they are.”

“And according to Mrs. Vale, the nearest available room is currently occupied by a retired judge, two honeymooners, and a man who claims he is here to photograph ghosts.”

Olivia closed her eyes.

“This lodge is cursed.”

Rowan walked to the fireplace and crouched to light the kindling.

“Maybe not cursed.”

“Do not say enchanted.”

He struck a match. Flame bloomed between his fingers.

“I was going to say inconvenient.”


A low sound rolled through the lodge.

Not thunder.

Too deep.

Too slow.

The floor trembled beneath Olivia’s boots.

The teacups on the tray rattled.

Rowan stood immediately.

“What was that?” Olivia whispered.

Neither of them moved.

The sound came again.

This time from below.

Not beneath the lodge.

Beyond it.

From the lake.

Olivia walked to the balcony doors and pulled back the curtain.

At first, she saw only snow.

Then the wind shifted.

For one brief moment, the storm opened like a veil.

Lake Tahoe stretched below the lodge, black and enormous beneath the night. The surface near the shore was frozen in pale sheets, but farther out, the water moved strangely.

Not waves.

Circles.

Slow, widening circles, as though something beneath the surface had turned in its sleep.

Rowan came to stand beside her.

His shoulder nearly touched hers.

“Tell me you see that,” she said.

“I see it.”

The circles spread wider.

Then the ice cracked.

A long silver line split across the frozen edge of the lake.

Olivia’s breath caught.

From somewhere in the room behind them, the old contract in her bag gave a sharp rustle.

She turned.

Her leather satchel sat on the chair by the fire.

The flap was closed.

But inside, the papers shifted again.

Rowan looked from the bag to Olivia.

“Does it usually do that?”

“No.”

“Good. I was hoping there was at least one normal thing about this situation.”

Olivia crossed the room and opened the satchel.

The contract lay on top.

The ink had changed.

Her stomach dropped.

The page that had once listed terms, signatures, and obligations now revealed a line she had not seen before. The words appeared slowly, as if written by an invisible hand.

When storm seals mountain and lake,
the promised pair shall remain beneath one roof
until the first vow is spoken.

Olivia read it twice.

Then a third time.

“No,” she said.

Rowan came up behind her and looked over her shoulder.

“First vow?”

Olivia grabbed the paper and held it toward the firelight.

“This was not here before.”

“I believe you.”

She looked at him, startled by how quickly he said it.

No teasing.

No smirk.

Only certainty.

“You do?”

“Yes.”

“Why?”

His gaze lowered to the contract.

“Because my family has spent generations pretending old magic is just old money.”

The fire snapped.

Olivia went very still.

“Magic,” she said.

“I know how that sounds.”

“It sounds impossible.”

“Yes.”

“And insane.”

“Also yes.”

“And like exactly the kind of thing a DeVille would say while trapped in a bedroom with one bed.”

His smile returned, faint but tired.

“There she is.”

Olivia wanted to argue.

She wanted logic. Law. Explanations. A loophole written in clean black ink.

Instead, the lodge groaned around them.

The lights flickered.

A whisper moved through the room.

Not from Rowan.

Not from the hallway.

From the contract.

Begin.

Olivia dropped the paper.

It did not fall.

It hovered for one impossible second in the air between them.

Then the fireplace roared blue.

Olivia stumbled back, and Rowan caught her by the arm.

His hand was warm.

Strong.

Real.

That was the problem.

Everything impossible was happening around her, but Rowan felt real.

The blue flame twisted upward, forming a shape in the heart of the fire.

A woman.

Tall.

Regal.

Crowned in shadows and gold.

Olivia’s pulse thundered.

She knew that face.

Not from memory.

From blood.

From the stories her grandmother used to whisper when the world felt too ordinary.

Queen Califia.

The figure in the fire opened her eyes.

The room filled with the scent of roses, smoke, and storm water.

“Daughter of the line,” the figure said.

Olivia could not breathe.

Rowan moved slightly in front of her, not enough to block her view, but enough to shield her if needed.

The queen’s burning gaze shifted to him.

“Son of the vow.”

Rowan’s jaw tightened.

“What do you want?” Olivia asked.

The queen smiled, but there was no comfort in it.

“The lake wakes. The old bargain stirs. What was sealed by your ancestors cannot remain buried.”

The balcony doors shook.

Outside, the ice cracked again.

Louder.

Closer.

Olivia forced herself to stand straight.

“I did not agree to any bargain.”

“No,” Queen Califia said. “You inherited one.”

“That is not consent.”

For the first time, the queen’s expression changed.

Something like pride flashed across her face.

“No,” she said. “It is not.”

Rowan looked at Olivia.

The silence between them deepened.

The fire dimmed from blue to gold.

The queen’s voice lowered.

“That is why the vow must be chosen. Not forced.”

Olivia’s heart beat hard against her ribs.

“What vow?” Rowan asked.

The queen looked toward the window.

“The first vow is not marriage. Not surrender. Not obedience.”

The storm quieted suddenly, as if the entire mountain was listening.

“It is protection.”

The word settled over the room like a spell.

Olivia looked at Rowan.

Protection.

She did not want to need it.

She did not want to give it.

And she certainly did not want to feel the strange pull in her chest that made the word sound less like a trap and more like a beginning.

Queen Califia’s image began to fade.

“Before dawn,” she said, “each of you must decide whether the other is worth standing beside.”

The flames collapsed back into ordinary fire.

The room went silent.

For several seconds, neither Olivia nor Rowan spoke.

Then Olivia sat slowly in one of the armchairs.

“Well,” she said, voice unsteady. “That was inconvenient.”

Rowan looked at her.

Then, against all reason, he laughed.

Not loudly.

Not carelessly.

But with the kind of disbelief that came after fear.

Olivia tried not to laugh too.

She failed.

The laughter broke something open between them.

Not trust.

Not yet.

But the first crack in the wall.


Outside, the lake groaned.

The reminder sobered them both.

Rowan took the second chair across from her.

“I meant what I said,” he told her.

“Which part?”

“You take the bed. I’ll take the floor.”

She studied him, searching for mockery.

There was none.

“You really are not what I expected,” she said.

“Neither are you.”

“That is not an answer.”

“It is the truth.”

The firelight moved over his face, softening the sharp lines of him.

Olivia looked down at the contract lying on the rug between them.

The new words remained.

Until the first vow is spoken.

Her life had been many things before this night.

Complicated.

Disciplined.

Carefully controlled.

But it had never been enchanted.

It had never been bound to a man with storm-gray eyes and secrets in his blood.

It had never asked her to stand beside someone she did not yet trust.

Outside, beneath the frozen waters of Lake Tahoe, something ancient shifted again.

The lodge trembled.

Rowan rose and walked to the window.

Olivia joined him.

Together, they watched the snow fall over the lake.

For a moment, neither moved away.

Then far below, deep beneath the ice, a blue light flickered.

Once.

Twice.

Like an eye opening in the dark.

“Rowan,” Olivia whispered.

“I see it.”

The light spread beneath the frozen water.

The contract rustled behind them.

And somewhere in the storm, something called their names.

Not loudly.

Not with a voice.

But with power.

Olivia reached for the curtain, ready to close out the impossible sight.

Rowan’s hand covered hers.

She froze.

He did not pull her closer.

He did not let go.

His voice was quiet, roughened by the dark.

“Before dawn,” he said, “we choose.”

Olivia looked at his hand over hers.

Then at the lake.

Then at the fire.

And for the first time since the Trust had dragged them into each other’s lives, she wondered if the contract had not brought her to a prison.

Maybe it had brought her to a threshold.

Behind them, the bedroom door locked by itself.

The sound was small.

Final.

Olivia closed her eyes.

“Of course,” she whispered.

Rowan’s thumb brushed once over her knuckles.

Outside, Lake Tahoe glowed blue beneath the storm.

And the ancient thing below began to rise.


End of Chapter Four

Tomorrow...

Chapter Five:
Before Dawn

Olivia and Rowan must decide whether protection is a promise, a trap, or the first spark of something neither of them is ready to name.

Monday, July 6, 2026

The Contractual Fiancée

Chapter Three

The First Meeting


L ake Tahoe had always been beautiful.

Today...

It was breathtaking.

Fresh snow dusted the towering Sierra Nevada pines while morning sunlight danced across the crystal-blue lake like thousands of scattered diamonds.

Olivia Jackson tightened the collar of her ivory wool coat as she stepped out of the rental SUV.

“This is ridiculous,” she muttered.

She wasn’t talking about Lake Tahoe.

She was talking about the summons.


The envelope had arrived less than twenty-four hours earlier.

No return address.

Only a crimson wax seal bearing Queen Califia’s crest.

The Living Veil Trust

Your presence is respectfully required.

Silver Pines Lodge.

Lake Tahoe.

Saturday — 11:00 a.m.

Attendance is mandatory.

Mandatory.

Olivia had nearly laughed.

No one had the authority to summon her.

And yet...

Here she was.


Silver Pines Lodge rose before her like something built for secrets.

Massive timber beams.

Stone fireplaces.

Floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the lake.

Smoke curled lazily from towering chimneys.

It looked less like a hotel...

And more like somewhere stories happened.

“I already don’t trust this place,” she whispered.

Inside, warmth wrapped around her immediately.

The enormous stone fireplace crackled.

Fresh cinnamon rolls perfumed the air.

Someone played soft jazz on a grand piano.

Everything felt peaceful.

Too peaceful.

A smiling receptionist greeted her.

“Welcome to Silver Pines.”

“I’m Olivia Jackson.”

The young woman immediately brightened.

“Oh! We’ve been expecting you.”

That sentence again.

Everyone seemed to be expecting her except herself.

The receptionist slid a brass room key across the polished counter.

Room Twenty-Seven.

Olivia frowned.

“I haven’t checked in.”

“Your reservation has already been arranged.”

“By whom?”

“I’m sorry. I wasn’t told.”

Of course not.

Olivia picked up the old-fashioned brass key.

It felt surprisingly warm.


Outside, a black Jeep Wrangler rolled into the circular drive.

Country music echoed through open windows.

The driver climbed out wearing faded jeans, hiking boots, and a dark leather jacket that had probably seen more mountain trails than shopping malls.

Rowan DeVille removed his sunglasses.

His first thought?

Beautiful.

His second?

I’m leaving.

He looked at Silver Pines.

“This has family meeting written all over it.”

Kai climbed out beside him carrying two duffel bags.

“You sure you don’t want me to stay?”

“No.”

“I’ve survived avalanches. I can survive rich relatives.”

Kai grinned.

“I wasn’t talking about them.”

“I was talking about your fiancée.”

Rowan groaned.

“We’re not calling her that.”

“Why not?”

“Because she’s not.”

Kai laughed so hard he nearly dropped the luggage.

“Keep telling yourself that.”


Five minutes later, Rowan stepped into the lodge.

Immediately...

He spotted her.

She stood near one of the enormous windows overlooking the lake.

Dark curls framed her face.

One hand rested lightly against the strap of her leather satchel.

She wasn’t looking around nervously.

She was studying the architecture.

Of course she was.

An archivist.

History fascinated her.

She probably knew when every beam had been installed.

Without realizing it...

He smiled.

Across the lobby, Olivia felt someone watching her.

She turned.

Their eyes met.

For one strange...

Unexpected...

Completely silent moment...

The world disappeared.

Neither spoke.

Neither moved.

It wasn’t lightning.
It wasn’t love.
It was recognition.

As though they had both remembered someone they had never actually met.

Then...

Rowan smiled.

Olivia immediately decided she did not trust smiles that confident.

She looked away first.


Rowan crossed the lobby.

“Olivia Jackson?”

She turned slowly.

“Yes.”

“I’m Rowan DeVille.”

“I know.”

His eyebrows lifted.

“You do?”

She reached into her satchel, pulled out her phone, and turned it around.

His photograph.

The one Glenda had sent.

“I received your résumé.”

He laughed.

“Résumé?”

“The photograph.”

“I’ve been informed you’re apparently my contractual problem.”

He blinked.

“Problem?”

“I was trying to be polite.”

He laughed again.

She hated that his laugh was contagious.

“I was told you already thought I was impossible.”

“I do.”

“You haven’t even met me.”

“I have now.”

He placed one hand dramatically over his heart.

“Ouch.”

She almost smiled.

Almost.


Before either of them could say another word...

Every light inside the lodge flickered.

Once.

Twice.

Three times.

The enormous grandfather clock in the lobby began striking...

Eleven.

Although Olivia’s watch read 10:43.

Guests looked around, confused.

The pianist stopped playing.

Outside...

Snow began falling.

Hard.

Within seconds, the brilliant blue sky disappeared behind swirling white.

The receptionist hurried toward the entrance.

“Oh no...”

Someone asked, “What is it?”

She looked back at everyone gathered in the lobby.

“The mountain pass just closed.”

Silence.

Then she smiled apologetically.

“I’m afraid no one is leaving today.”

Olivia slowly turned toward Rowan.

“You planned this.”

Rowan blinked.

“I absolutely did not.”

“I don’t believe you.”

“I rescue people from snowstorms. I don’t schedule them.”

She folded her arms.

“This day keeps getting better.”

He smiled.

“I was just thinking the exact same thing.”


Just then, the elderly concierge approached carrying a leather-bound guest register.

“Miss Jackson.”

“Mr. DeVille.”

“The Trust asked me to give you this.”

He placed the ancient book into Olivia’s hands.

The leather cover bore a familiar symbol.

Queen Califia’s royal seal.

As Olivia touched it...

The cover opened by itself.

Golden writing slowly appeared across the first page.

Neither of them spoke.

Together, they read the same sentence.

“Only when two hearts choose trust over fear will the Living Veil reveal its first secret.”

The words shimmered.

Then vanished.

The book snapped shut.

Neither Olivia nor Rowan noticed the elderly concierge smiling quietly to himself.

Because when they looked up...

He was gone.

As though he had never been there at all.


✨ End of Chapter Three ✨

Tomorrow...

Chapter Four: The One-Room Mistake

The storm has trapped everyone at Silver Pines Lodge.

Olivia and Rowan are about to discover that the Trust made only one reservation...

One room.
One fireplace.
One bed.

And outside...

Something ancient has begun to awaken beneath the frozen waters of Lake Tahoe.


💕 If you enjoyed today’s episode, follow along for the next chapter of The Contractual Fiancée.

The Contractual Fiancée

Chapter Two

The Man Who Didn't Believe in Destiny


T he helicopter banked hard against the wind.

Snow whipped across the windshield in thick white ribbons as the rescue helicopter hovered over a granite cliff overlooking the sapphire waters of Lake Tahoe.

Below…

A stranded rock climber clung to a narrow ledge.

One mistake…

One loose grip…

One cruel gust of wind…

—and he would disappear into the canyon forever.

Rowan DeVille smiled.

“Well,” he muttered into his headset, “this beats sitting in traffic.”

His rescue partner, Kai Mendoza, shot him a look.

“You seriously joke at times like this?”

“I joke because I don’t want my mother to be right.”

“What did she say?”

“That one day I’d do something stupid.”

Kai snorted.

“Pretty sure dangling from helicopters qualifies.”

“It only qualifies if I fall.”


The rescue cable tightened.

Without another word, Rowan stepped off the helicopter.

For one impossible second…

He floated.

Then gravity claimed him.

The icy wind slammed against his chest as he descended toward the frightened climber.

“Easy,” Rowan called. “I’m here.”

The climber’s terrified eyes filled with relief.

“Oh, thank God.”

“No,” Rowan said, grinning. “My grandmother gets credit for that.”

The man blinked.

“What?”

“Long story.”

Within minutes, the rescue harness clicked into place.

“You married?” Rowan asked casually.

“What?”

“I asked if you’re married.”

The man nodded. “Thirty-two years.”

“Good.”

“Why?”

“So your wife can yell at you for doing something this dumb.”

Even through the panic, the climber laughed.

The tension broke.

Sometimes making people laugh saved them almost as much as the ropes.

Fifteen minutes later, both men stepped safely onto solid ground.

Applause erupted from the emergency crew.

Someone slapped Rowan on the shoulder.

Another handed him a bottle of water.

A little boy ran up clutching a notebook.

“Mr. DeVille?”

Rowan knelt.

“What’s your name?”

“Ethan.”

“You going to be a mountain rescuer someday?”

The little boy nodded enthusiastically.

“No,” Rowan said.

The child frowned.

“I think you’ll be better.”

Rowan signed the notebook.


His phone buzzed.

Unknown Number.

He ignored it.

It buzzed again.

Kai looked over.

“You going to answer that?”

“Nope.”

“It might be important.”

“If it’s important, they’ll leave a message.”

The phone buzzed a third time.

Kai laughed.

“Whoever that is… they’re persistent.”

Rowan sighed dramatically.

“Fine.”

He answered.

“This is Rowan.”

A warm woman’s voice greeted him.

“Good afternoon, Mr. DeVille. My name is Glenda D’Goodwrench-Jackson.”

Rowan frowned.

“I’m sorry. Have we met?”

“No. But your grandmother knew mine.”

“Okay…”

“And Queen Califia knew them both.”

Rowan looked toward Kai.

Kai mouthed:

Telemarketer?

Rowan shrugged.

“I’m afraid you have the wrong number.”

“No,” Glenda said softly. “I have waited twenty-nine years for this conversation.”

He rubbed the back of his neck.

“Lady, I just rappelled off a helicopter. I’ve had enough excitement for one day.”

“I’m afraid your excitement is only beginning.”

“Is this about insurance?”

“No.”

“Taxes?”

“No.”

“A lawsuit?”

“No.”

“Then I’m out of guesses.”

Glenda chuckled.

“You’ve inherited something.”

Rowan laughed.

“My grandfather left me fishing poles. My father left me old trucks. My mother left me anxiety. What exactly did I inherit now?”

Silence.

Then Glenda answered.

“A fiancée.”

Rowan stopped walking.

“Come again?”

“A contractual fiancée.”

Kai nearly choked on his bottled water.

Rowan covered the phone.

“I think someone is pranking me.”

Kai grinned.

“This is already the best day ever.”

Rowan uncovered the phone.

“I don’t even have a girlfriend.”

“I know.”

“You have an heiress.”

“I don’t want an heiress.”

“You haven’t met her.”

“I’m not planning to.”

“I’m afraid you’ll have to.”

“And why is that?”

“Because without both signatures… the Trust dies.”

Rowan sighed.

“What trust?”

“The Living Veil.”

He closed his eyes.

“That sounds incredibly fake.”

“It isn’t.”

“And who exactly is this mystery woman?”

Glenda smiled through the phone.

“You’ll like this part.”

“I doubt it.”

“She’s an archivist.”

“Oh.”

“She likes history.”

“Oh.”

“She dislikes risk.”

“Oh.”

“She has never jumped out of a helicopter.”

“Smart woman.”

“And she already thinks you’re impossible.”

Rowan laughed.

“She’s probably right.”


His phone chimed.

A photograph appeared.

A woman.

Dark hair.

Intelligent eyes.

Standing inside an archive surrounded by ancient manuscripts.

She wasn’t smiling.

She looked like someone who trusted books more than people.

Olivia Jackson

Your Contractual Fiancée

Rowan stared longer than he intended.

Kai leaned over his shoulder.

“Dang.”

Rowan looked up.

“What?”

“I think you’re in trouble.”

“Why?”

Kai grinned.

“Because she’s beautiful… and she already looks annoyed with you.”

Rowan laughed.

For the first time all day…

He couldn’t seem to look away from her photograph.

Then his phone vibrated one last time.

A new message appeared.

She already knows about you.

Rowan smiled.

“Oh…”

“This should be interesting.”


✨ To Be Continued... ✨

Tomorrow in Chapter Three...

Olivia has already decided Rowan DeVille is reckless, arrogant, and exactly the kind of man she intends to avoid.

Unfortunately, fate has reserved only one room at the mountain lodge.


💕 If you enjoyed today’s episode, follow along for the next chapter of The Contractual Fiancée.

```

Sunday, July 5, 2026

The Contractual Fiancée

Chapter One

A California Magic Romance


O livia Jackson believed old paper had a heartbeat. Most people saw brittle parchment, faded ink, and forgotten history. Olivia saw promises. She saw secrets. She saw lives waiting to be remembered.

Inside the California Heritage Archive in Sacramento, silence wrapped around her like an old quilt. Climate-controlled rooms stretched in every direction, preserving California's past one fragile document at a time. She loved every minute of it. Ancient journals. Spanish land grants. Mission records. Letters written during the Gold Rush. Nothing fascinated her more than discovering forgotten stories hidden beneath centuries of dust. Until today.

A steel courier case sat alone on her restoration table. No shipping label. No sender. No paperwork. Only an ancient crimson wax seal. At its center... A woman wearing a jeweled crown. Riding beside an enormous griffin.

Queen Califia

Olivia slowly ran her gloved fingertips across the edge of the unopened case. Something... didn't feel ordinary. The room suddenly felt warmer.

"Tell me you're not talking to another document." Olivia smiled before looking up. Her best friend Maya Reed leaned against the doorway holding two oversized coffees and one oversized opinion. "You skipped breakfast again." "I'm working." "You whispered, 'What are you hiding?'" "I did not." "You absolutely did." Maya placed the coffee beside her. "You need hobbies." "I have one." "Ancient paper doesn't count."

Olivia carefully broke the wax seal. The lid lifted with surprising ease. Inside rested a single rolled parchment tied with deep emerald silk. Nothing else. No letter. No explanation. Only the parchment.

She untied the ribbon. The moment the parchment unrolled... every light inside the archive flickered. Once. Twice. Then— Silence.

Maya looked toward the ceiling. "Please tell me Sacramento isn't having another power outage." "It isn't." "You sound way too calm." "I'm trying to convince myself none of that just happened."

The ink upon the parchment appeared faded. Almost invisible. Olivia adjusted the restoration lamp. Slowly... Words emerged. Not because the light revealed them. Because the ink was writing itself.

Where love is contracted without truth... The Living Veil awakens.

Olivia's breath caught. Her grandmother's journal... The one locked away since Olivia was sixteen... had mentioned those exact words. The Living Veil. She had always believed it was merely family folklore.

Maya stared. "Liv..." "I'm seeing it too." "No." Maya slowly pointed. "I'm talking about..."

The wax seal. It glowed. Softly. Not bright. Not blinding. Golden. Like sunlight trapped beneath ancient glass.

Olivia stepped backward. The temperature inside the room dropped several degrees. The hairs on the back of her neck stood. Then— Her cellphone vibrated. Unknown Number. She ignored it. It rang again. This time... The caller identification changed.

D'GOODWRENCH-JACKSON TRUST

Maya blinked. "Okay..." "That's either the coolest family trust in California..." "...or the beginning of a horror movie."

Olivia reluctantly answered. "Hello?" A warm woman's voice answered. "Miss Jackson?" "My name is Glenda D'Goodwrench-Jackson." "I apologize for interrupting your day." "But..." "The document has awakened."

Olivia froze. She hadn't told anyone. No one.

"I believe you've mistaken me for someone else." The woman chuckled softly. "No, dear." "I've been waiting twenty-seven years to call this number."

Olivia felt her pulse racing. "What do you want?"

"I need you to come to Lake Tahoe."

"I don't even know you."

"I know." "But Queen Califia does."

Silence.

Then Glenda quietly added...

"The Trust has chosen its final heirs."

Olivia laughed nervously. "I think you've called the wrong Olivia."

"No." "We've called exactly the right one." "There is only one problem."

"What problem?"

"You inherited..."

"...a fiancé."

Olivia nearly dropped her phone.

Before she could respond— A text message appeared from another unknown number.

Attached... One photograph.

A breathtaking man suspended from a rescue helicopter above the crystal-blue waters of Lake Tahoe. Wind whipping through dark hair. Laughing. As if danger were merely another sport.

Rowan DeVille

Your Contractual Fiancé

Olivia stared at the image. Then... The ancient parchment lying on the restoration table slowly unfolded by itself. A second page... that hadn't existed moments before... began writing her future.


✨ To Be Continued... ✨

Tomorrow in Chapter Two... Meet Rowan DeVille. The man who has absolutely no intention of getting engaged... ...until an ancient trust changes everything.


💕 If you enjoyed today's episode, don't forget to follow my blog so you won't miss tomorrow's chapter!

When Lavender Met Flint...

Magic Awakened. Secrets Surfaced.


Every family has secrets.
The La Cours have enemies.
The Devilles have magic.
Flint and Lavender have only each other.

Until now...

Flint Ambrose Deville and Lavender Ann Lundy discover a love as electrifying as it is unexpected. But while passion sparks between them, danger begins to stir in the shadows of their Silicon Valley lives.

Nicholas La Cour, haunted by his family’s turbulent legacy, is forced back into a battle he thought he had left behind when his old nemesis, Dante Channing, resurfaces. Alongside the mysterious group known as the Whispers, Dante brings a threat powerful enough to shatter the fragile balance the La Cour and Deville families fought so hard to restore.

As Lavender and Flint navigate the challenges of their budding romance, they are pulled into a web of secrets, loyalty, betrayal, and danger. With the Orchid Lover’s power dormant but far from gone, and the Veil stirring once again, the stakes have never been higher.

What if the love they found is not enough to protect them from the secrets of the past?

What if the balance they restored comes at a price none of them are prepared to pay?

Their chemistry was undeniable.
Their enemies were waiting.
One romance. One ancient secret. One impossible choice.

Will passion and loyalty triumph, or will the La Cour and Deville families be consumed by forces they can no longer control? And can Nicholas La Cour protect his family from the nemesis of his past before everything he loves is destroyed?

Lovers, Players, Seducers Book IV: When Lavender Meets Flint! It’s Magic!

Friday, July 3, 2026

She Survived the Unthinkable… But the Real Nightmare Was Just Beginning

What if escaping your captor was only the first lie you uncovered?

Some people survive tragedy.

Others survive only to discover they never knew the truth in the first place.

Imagine waking up after a near-fatal abduction, believing the worst is behind you—only to realize that every person around you may be hiding something.

Every smile feels suspicious. Every promise sounds rehearsed. Every answer creates even more questions.

Who would you trust?

That is the terrifying question at the heart of The Deceiver’s Secret ~ Book II: The Deceiver’s Fall!


When Trust Becomes the Greatest Risk

After surviving a horrifying abduction, Eve Lafoy refuses to remain anyone’s victim.

She wants answers. She wants justice. Most of all, she wants the truth.

But every truth has a price.

The deeper Eve digs, the more she discovers that deception reaches far beyond anything she imagined.

Can One Person Really Be Trusted?

Enter Hawke Deville.

Strong. Protective. Dangerously mysterious.

He may be the only man capable of helping Eve survive.

Or… he may be keeping secrets that could destroy everything.

Their attraction is undeniable, but passion alone cannot overcome deception.

One mistake. One wrong choice. One moment of hesitation. Game over.

Sometimes the Greatest Prison Is Fear

Fear has an incredible way of convincing us that our story is already written.

That we will never recover. Never heal. Never trust again.

But change begins the moment we decide our past no longer controls our future.

Eve’s journey reminds us that courage is not the absence of fear. Courage is choosing to move forward while fear is still standing in the room.

If You Love Romantic Suspense Thrillers…

This book delivers:

  • Heart-racing suspense
  • Fierce romance
  • Dangerous secrets
  • Shocking betrayal
  • High-stakes action
  • A strong female lead who refuses to break

Ready to Discover the Truth?

Some secrets are worth dying for.

Others are worth risking everything to expose.

If you are ready for a thriller packed with suspense, fierce romance, shocking twists, and unforgettable danger, step into Eve Lafoy’s world today.

Click Here to Get The Deceiver’s Secret ~ Book II: The Deceiver’s Fall!

Listen to Chapters 1–3 and experience the suspense before the adventure begins.


Happy Reading!
— J. A. Jackson

Saturday, June 27, 2026

Coming Soon

A Book That Will Reveal The Most Powerful Magic Lies Deep Within!

Stay Tuned…


The Magic of Thoughtful Reflections

I walked through the fire, yet I did not burn.
I stood in the middle of the storm, yet I did not drown.

There was a time when I lost sight of who I was. I allowed someone else's words, actions, and expectations to shape the way I saw myself. I mistook control for love, criticism for concern, and silence for peace. Like many people who find themselves in difficult relationships or challenging seasons of life, I slowly drifted away from my own voice.

But storms have a way of revealing what is strongest within us.

The years between 2019 and 2025 brought some of the most difficult challenges of my life. I experienced heartbreak, betrayal, emotional exhaustion, and moments when I questioned my own worth. Through therapy, self-reflection, and a commitment to healing, I began the journey back to myself.

That journey taught me something extraordinary:
The most powerful magic is not found outside of us—it is found within.

It is found in the quiet moment when we choose gratitude over bitterness.

It is found in the courage to forgive ourselves for our mistakes.

It is found in the decision to keep moving forward when life feels uncertain.

It is found in the simple act of pausing long enough to listen to our own hearts.


As an author, I have spent years creating stories filled with resilience, hope, love, and transformation. Yet some of my greatest lessons came not from writing fiction, but from living through my own story. Along the way, I began creating journals and reflection exercises to help myself heal. What started as a personal practice soon became a daily source of clarity, comfort, and strength.

Those reflections became the foundation for this journal.

The Magic of Thoughtful Reflections was created as a safe space for self-discovery, healing, growth, and hope. Within these pages, you will find opportunities to explore your thoughts, celebrate your victories, learn from your challenges, and reconnect with the person you were always meant to be.

There are no perfect answers here.
There is no right or wrong way to reflect.
There is only your journey.

Whether you are healing from loss, navigating change, rebuilding your confidence, or simply seeking a deeper connection with yourself, I hope these pages become a trusted companion along the way.

May this journal remind you that your story is still being written.

May it help you uncover the wisdom, courage, and strength that already live within you.

And may you discover, one thoughtful reflection at a time, that the most beautiful transformation begins the moment you believe in your own magic.


With hope and gratitude,
J. A. Jackson
Author of Still the Storm


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